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Baek, Jong-Beom
Center for Dimension-Controllable Organic Frameworks
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Anomalous phonon softening of G-band in compressed graphitic carbon nitride due to strong electrostatic repulsion

Author(s)
Yang, ZhenxingMahmood, JaveedNiu, ShifengTian, HuiJi, TingtingLiu, CailongBaek, Jong-BeomSundqvist, BertilYao, MingguangLiu, Bingbing
Issued Date
2021-01
DOI
10.1063/5.0038445
URI
https://scholarworks.unist.ac.kr/handle/201301/55941
Fulltext
https://aip.scitation.org/doi/10.1063/5.0038445
Citation
APPLIED PHYSICS LETTERS, v.118, no.2, pp.023103
Abstract
Graphitic carbon nitride (C2N and C3N) with various pi electron distributions on layers have been studied under pressure through a combined theoretical and experimental approach and a comparison with graphite. It is found that as these materials transform into low compressibility phases in the pressure range from 15 to 45GPa, strong electrostatic repulsion between pi electrons and in-plane sp(2) electrons may distort and soften the sp(2) bonds, leading to anomalous pressure evolutions of the intralayer phonon vibrations, such as a plateau-like behavior of E-2g mode (G-band) in C2N and C3N. This also causes a slow increase in the resistivity/resistance of C2N and C3N as pressure increases, and the gradual interlayer bonding leads to an abrupt increase in resistance of the materials but with different pressure responses due to their different pi electron distributions. Moreover, the intensity enhancement of the G band in both CN materials may be related to their electronic structure changes. The results deepen our understanding of the effects of pi electron distribution on the structural transition of graphitic materials and may explain some unexplained in previous studies.
Publisher
AMER INST PHYSICS
ISSN
0003-6951
Keyword
HIGH-PRESSUREBORON-NITRIDENANOTUBES

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